GLOSSARY ENTRY (DERIVED FROM QUESTION BELOW) | ||||||
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10:49 Jul 4, 2008 |
Spanish to English translations [PRO] Law/Patents - Real Estate | |||||||
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| Selected response from: Ana Brause Local time: 02:15 | ||||||
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Summary of answers provided | ||||
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5 | real estate by designation |
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4 | fixtures |
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4 | immovable property |
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4 | earmarked property |
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3 | annexation |
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Discussion entries: 1 | |
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fixtures Explanation: S/Dict.Alcaraz-Hughes: Fixture: instalación accesoria a un inmueble, accesorio fijo, inmueble o cosa inmueble por incorporacion y destino. S/Glosario MOrellana: inmueble por destino: (Sp)fixtures Suerte Ana |
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immovable property Explanation: "immovable property" another option, ;.) suerte Example sentence(s):
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Notes to answerer
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real estate by designation Explanation: bienes inmuebles = real estate (literally goods that are not movable) a building is "un bien inmueble" or a parking lot, etc. At the end of the Concession, all of the infrastructure and property affected by the concession, including the works, the equipment that constitutes real estate by designation according to Ecuadoran legislation, the assets inherent to the operation, as well as the departments and accessory services, and evidently the rights for their use and exploitation |
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earmarked property Explanation: Sug. |
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annexation Explanation: First, a Spanish definition of bienes inmuebles por destino from website http://www.arqhys.com/arquitectura/inmuebles-bienes.html: Bienes inmuebles por destino: es cuando a estos bienes se les agregan muebles Following the logic that bienes inmuebles por destino are items of personal property that have been designated as part of the real estate itself (http://chestofbooks.com/business/law/American-Commercial-Law... The word fixtures is employed in two senses: sometimes to indicate that the property described as a fixture can be removed and sometimes to indicate that the property so described cannot be removed. In the latter sense it is perhaps more frequently employed as when we say a certain article is a fixture and must go with the real estate; but it is used also in the former sense, as when we say that a tenant can remove fixtures. ***We will avoid this difficulty by speaking of annexations, and attempting to indicate when and for what purposes they are to be considered as part of the real estate and when and for what purposes they are not.*** |
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